Dissertação
Fronteira, identidade, essência: a busca das origens do Rio Grande do Sul em Gaúchos e Beduínos, de Manoelito de Ornellas
Fecha
2015-04-22Registro en:
THESING, Neandro Vieira. FRONTIER, IDENTITY,ESSENCE: THE SEARCH OF RIO GRANDE DO SUL ORIGINS IN GAÚCHOS E BEDUÍNOS, OF MANOELITO DE ORNELLAS. 2015. 124 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em História) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2015.
Autor
Thesing, Neandro Vieira
Institución
Resumen
In 1948, Manoelito of Ornellas published his work Gauchos and Bedouins: ethnicity
and the social formation of Rio Grande do Sul, inserting himself in the debates on the
(re)formulation of regional identity carried out in the mid-twentieth century in the state. At that
time, disputes involving the legitimate past and what is and how to be gaucho took new turns,
different from those born with the creation of IHGRS and the "official line". Both history as
discipline and the social actors involved changed. In this research, we try to demonstrate the
transformation that occurred and how the work and the author fit into the heart of this process.
For this, the dissertation is divided into three chapters In the first, will be addressed the relations
of the author and his work with their contexts, especially the historiographical culture of Rio
Grande do Sul and the debates around the regionalist literature, tradition in which he was
inserted as an intellectual. The second chapter takes place a mixture of biography and
intellectual biography, paying attention to the trajectory of Manoelito in seek of grants to interrelate
their written production. In the third and last is performed an internal review of Gauchos
and Bedouins, trying to understand their epistemological assumptions, notions and central
representations builded, his dialogue with the historiographical culture of the period and the
insertion in the debate on the identity (re)construction during the publication period. The
research is linked to the Research Field Integration, Politic and Frontier of the PPGH-UFSM
and was funded by a CAPES/FAPERGS scholarship.